Nigel Farage blasts Kent Police chief constable in letter after two officers 'lectured' him at home over politician’s 100-mile trip to make film about Dover migrants as he says it’s an ‘unwise use of officers' time and public money’
An unrepentant Nigel Farage has today hand-delivered a letter of complaint to Kent Police after two 'sheepish' officers turned up on his doorstep to chide him over his trips to Dover to highlight the numbers of migrants arriving in Britain by boat.
It came as he returned to the Kent coast where 11 migrants were picked up - with more than 1,000 having now having made it to Britain this year.
Law enforcers 'advised' the ex-MEP about lockdown rules and essential travel on Tuesday after a complaint was reportedly made following a trips to the Port of Dover he'd made to report on the UK's 'illegal migrant scandal'.
But today Mr Farage delivered a letter to Kent Police headquarters in Maidstone in which he said he was 'certain' the visit to his home was 'a very unwise use of officers' time and of public money'.
An unrepentant Nigel Farage (pictured) has today hand-delivered a letter of complaint to Kent Police after two 'sheepish' officers turned up on his doorstep to chide him over his trips to Dover
More migrants arrive by dinghy this morning after 49 refugees reached the UK on Sunday, with another 31 also caught on the other side of the Channel and taken back to France
The crossings mean more than 1,000 asylum seekers have made it to Britain this year - rapidly creeping up on the 1,850 figure for the whole of 2019 (pictured: Dover this morning)
He added, in the letter to Chief Constable Pughsley: 'To be called on so late at night unexpectedly is rather alarming. Can you please tell me why it was considered necessary to knock on my door well after the working day was over and when I was in fact about to go to bed as opposed to, say, the next morning?
'I am the leader of a national political party, the Brexit Party, and a broadcaster for a national radio station, LBC. I also write articles regularly for the Daily Telegraph. The reason I visited Dover as you may by now know was to report on the arrival of illegal immigrants there, some of whom have shown coronavirus symptoms.'
Mr Farage dubbed it 'lockdown lunacy' after he was visited by two police officers following his trip to Dover
On Monday Mr Farage appeared in Dover and said he 'witnessed first hand our Border Force acting as a taxi service for illegal migrants', adding that Britons have 'every right to be angry about it'.
A total of 16 migrants including a baby were picked up off the Kent coast that day - as the figure of those coming to Britain rapidly creeps up on the 1,850 figure for the whole of 2019.
The following day Mr Farage said he was the victim of 'lockdown lunacy' after two 'sheepish' police officers turned up on his doorstep to chide him over his trip to Dover
The Brexit Party leader today told MailOnline police may turn up at his home again but said he won't be 'intimidated, so went back to the Kent coast for LBC
The Brexit Party leader told MailOnline police may turn up at his home again but said he won't be 'intimidated, so went back to the Kent coast for LBC today.
A group of 11 migrants - eight men and three women - were brought into the Port of Dover this morning after crossing the Channel in one boat.
Mr Farage said: 'We have reporters out all over the country, covering Covid-19 and many other stories, and the imparting of information to the public by journalists is classified as a key worker's job'.
He was visited by two 'sheepish' Kent Police officers at 9.40pm on Monday night who warned him about the lockdown allowing only 'essential travel'.
Mr Farage said: 'I personally think that the police deeply mistaken by visiting me - by any definition what I did was perfectly within the rules.
'I would prefer they didn't [visit again] but I won't be intimidated by a knock on the door at the dead of night.
'That's partly why I went back today – but also to tell this important story. There is also a coronavirus element because there are known cases in the Calais Jungle.
'Before I left this morning one boat had been picked up by the British border force - and we suspect the French navy picked two or three more. We all know that Dover is the tip of the iceberg'.
Mr Farage said that 3,200 people had come to the UK on dinghies and small boats since 2018 – but predicted 'at this rate it could be this much again by the end of the year'.
It came after 49 refugees reached the UK on Sunday, with another 31 also caught on the other side of the Channel and taken back to France.
The crossings mean more than 1,000 asylum seekers have made it to Britain this year - rapidly creeping up on the 1,850 figure for the whole of 2019.
Last month, a record 523 asylum seekers arrived in the UK after making the life-risking boat trip across the Dover Strait shipping lane.
And it was revealed at the weekend that just five per cent of migrants who have crossed since January 2019 have been sent back to Europe. Around one in 20 - 155 of 2,839 refugees - were returned, Home Office data showed.
Last month, a record 523 asylum seekers arrived in the UK after making the life-risking boat trip across the Dover Strait shipping lane (pictured: Dover this morning)
Chris Philp, Minister for Immigration Compliance and the Courts, had said: 'We are all working night and day to dismantle and arrest the criminal gangs who trade in people smuggling.
'Criminals are abusing vulnerable men, women and children by trafficking them across the Channel.
'This illegal and criminal activity is subject to heavy law enforcement activity by Border Force, the National Crime Agency, Immigration Enforcement and French law enforcement.
'Over 1,100 migrants were arrested in France in the first quarter of this year and in 2019 Immigration Enforcement made 418 arrests, leading to 203 convictions for a total of 437 years.
'Our actions are focussed on going after the criminals perpetrating these crimes and prosecuting them for their criminal activity.'
Former MEP Mr Farage was seen at Dover on Monday, days after being slammed for travelling 100 miles during lockdown to make a video on migrant crossings in Hastings, East Sussex.
He said: 'Over 1,000 people have come in through Dover already this year.
'Unless we act, it will be many thousands more. Time for the Home Secretary to step up.
'I witnessed first hand our Border Force acting as a taxi service, this must change.'
The issue has continued despite the Government pumping millions of pounds into security measures to patrol the French coastline.
Last week Home Secretary Priti Patel told MPs about a new crackdown on migrant crossings - just months after she had outlined a plan which she claimed would all but eradicate them.
Nigel Farage blasts Kent Police chief constable in letter after two officers 'lectured' him at home over politician’s 100-mile trip to make film about Dover migrants as he says it’s an ‘unwise use of officers' time and public money’
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May 08, 2020
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